“It is time for us to respond to the crisis of discrimination in healthcare,” Nunez-Smith said.
The pandemic has exacerbated existing health disparities and the associate professor of medicine and epidemiology at the Yale School of Medicine said that the US needs to “ensure equitable opportunities for health and well-being.”
“We realized, we must really not become comfortable with the fact that over 70% of African Americans and 60% of Latinx Americans personally know someone who has been hospitalized, or died from Covid-19,” she said.
As health care experts in the US look into 2021, Nunez-Smith says, one of the nation’s priorities should be collecting high-quality data on race and ethnicity and commit to increasing the number of health care workers of color and those in leadership positions
After the country witnessed collective racial injustice and the impact that Covid-19 had in communities of color, Nunez-Smith says, the federal government asked officials to report race and ethnicity data linked to coronavirus cases but there has been a lack of compliance.
“We cannot address what we cannot see,” Nunez-Smith said. “We are making a choice every time we allow poor quality data to hinder our ability to intervene on racial ethnic inequities.”